Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Karl Friedrich Schinkel - Gardner's House

Auditorium Seats at Goetheaneum

Otto Wagner - Postparkasse

Zaha Hadid - BMW

Channel Glass at Zaha Hadid's BMW, Leipzig Germany

This building material, ubiquitous in sheds and industrial buildings throughout europe, is here treated with a near-Loosian reverence: clean and exquisitely detailed.

Carlos Scarpa's Brion-Vega Cemetery

Carlos Scarpa's Brion-Vega Cemetery (San Vito d'Altivole, Italy). The layering and manipulation of the ground plane in Scarpa's cemetary is accentuated by the surrounding wall. The wall's top is at eye level, and is reinforced by a band of colored tile that continues horizontally across the taller structures in the complex. Here, the cornfield beyond the wall establishes a new ground line, you feel as though the cemetery has sunk into the earth.

herzog & de meuron - allianz arena

Herzog & de Meuron's Allianz Arena in Munich's most notable feature is the skin, an elaborate system of inflatable plastic bubbles which are backlit by red, green, and blue lights, which can be combined to indicate the colors of whatever teams are currently playing.

the soccer stadium has no track, so seats come up directly to the field, and the upper decks extend closer to the field than most stadiums. This allows more direct views for the audience, and the structure that appears monolithic on the exterior actually feels quite intimate once inside.

Not shown, the stadium sits atop a plinth, styled after highway on-ramps, and sits in a parking area landscaped according to studies on the movement and flow of fans, teams and deliveries.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Lake Bled, Croatia


bled, originally uploaded by artista de tierra.

Kelly's photograph of the island in the middle of Lake Bled in Croatia.

Villa Medici


Villa Medici, originally uploaded by rbooth_18.

Another view of the Villa Medici gardens, also taken by Ryan on a sojourn from Slovenia.

Medici Villa


Medici Villa, originally uploaded by rbooth_18.

Photograph taken by Ryan as part of the Slovenia trip, on one of their excursions into Italy.

Friday, July 13, 2007

O-H-I-O


IMG_1037, originally uploaded by tyleroguy.

You can take the students away from Ohio State, but....

Just Thought This Was Cool


IMG_1108, originally uploaded by tyleroguy.

This came across from the KSA's Europe trip the other day, and I thought it was an interesting building - don't know anything about it, though.

Friday, June 29, 2007

South Field Trip


Some of the group at the Beach in San Benedetto

Santa Croce in Lecce
The Cathedral in Trani
Matera
Ercolano- A city destroyed by Mount Vesuvius. Smaller than Pompeii but better preserved
Matera at Night

Ascoli Piceno Pictures

Piazza Arringo in Ascoli Piceno
Architecture School in Ascoli Piceno- an old monastery

Ancient Roman bridge in Ascoli
View of Ascoli from school


The first two weeks of the trip were spent in Ascoli Piceno. We worked in groups with Italian students from the University of Camerino on a small airport project.

Matera


Thursday, June 28, 2007

Italy Tour Retrospective


While the Europe group is busy travelling, another group recently concluded its studies. Professor Kay Bea Jones led a group of students on a study abroad session in Italy last Spring, and they've been trickling back into the school bearing images. Above you can see the Piazza del Popolo in Ascoli.

Click here for a gallery of images from the Italy trip

Monday, June 25, 2007

ishtar gate

Babylon's Ishtar Gate at Berlin's Pergamon Museum.

I asked a brick what it wanted to be. It replied: "A LION!"

Dutch Embassy, Berlin

OMA's Dutch Embassy. Detail showing different approaches to wood as a material.

H+dM's Cottbus University Library

Interior of Herzog & de Meuron's Cottbus University Library (Germany)

The exterior (not shown) is an image comprised of overlaid letters... accumulated to the point where the letters are unintelligible, yet still recognizable as typography. The floor plates are overlaid/pained with the pure tones of a tv test-pattern, which serves several goals:

1. The mapping of the tv image onto the floor could be seen as a highly conceptual architectural move, encouraging the viewer to examine the relationship between the image (tv) and text (the facade / the stacks). Note that the facade is an example of text-becoming image. Is the coloring of the floor an example of image-becoming-text?

2. The color mapping / supergraphics of the tv-test pattern seems at first to be quite arbitrary, yet it could be understood as an overcoding - an additional organization system that exists outside of the organization of the stacks, and outside the organization of the building, yet can serve to reinforce both in unexpected ways. First of all, the floor plan of the building is rather amorphous, and there is little differentiation in the architecture itself. These ordered bands of color add order via experiential narrative -you enter (blue), take the stairs (purple/lime), find your book (orange), then retrace your steps, using the color as an aid.... perhaps it's not that complicated, but merely having one stair core in one color zone and the second in another helps the confused visitor orient himself.

(photo by Tyler)

Shalachet

“Shalachet” (Fallen Leaves), installation in the Jewish Museum's "Memory Void"

Possibly the best space/moment in Libeskind's Berlin Jewish Museum, a tall room/void filled with these metal faces. Visitors walk on the these, creating an eerie clanging.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Zaha Hadid at Wolfsburg

this is an example of the beautiful concrete at Hadid's Phaeno Science Center in Wolfsburg, Germany. The building itself leaves much to be desired (pales in comparison with her BMW plant in Leipzig), but the concrete, showing the imprint of the carefully-crafted wooden formwork, is a work of art.

Unfortunately...

finding an internet cafe that's capable of flickr uploads proved difficult in Berlin, so I'm writing from Praugue. This photo is from neither of those places: It's Walter Gropius's Bauhaus in Dessau.

Jewish Memorial


IMG_0565, originally uploaded by tyleroguy.

The first photos from the Europe trip have started hitting Flickr - this is Tyler's photo of the Jewish Memorial in Berlin, designed by Peter Eisenman.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Slovenia Group Update...


the site we are designing, originally uploaded by rbooth_18.

Hello everyone, just a quick note to say that, in addition to the Europe tour that's being led by Jackie Gargus, there's a group of Landscape Architecture students in Slovenia right now. This is the site they're working with in Trzic. You can follow their progress on the KSA website here:

http://knowlton.osu.edu/?content=60&travel=slovenia

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Guggenheim Restoration

yeah

R is for Renovation.


Also: Rust

Guggenheim Restoration


The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history. The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history. The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history. The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history. The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history. The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history. The Guggenheim NYC is currently undergoing the most extensive renovation in its history.

Monday, June 04, 2007

L1000506




another flashy embeddy thing-o. this time from here

The Blob's Revenge


Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean aliquet, velit sed consectetuer commodo, justo ligula volutpat tortor, sit amet pharetra mauris tortor sed metus. Duis quis nisl a sapien aliquet ullamcorper. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Etiam neque ligula, rutrum in, tempor et, tempor non, metus. Integer leo. Duis at leo. Phasellus nonummy felis quis libero. Curabitur porttitor quam vel tortor mollis commodo. Integer posuere imperdiet sem. Curabitur augue. In ac velit. Sed fermentum massa. Nulla odio est, euismod tempor, porttitor a, egestas nec, tellus. Fusce convallis. Donec quis urna nec sem placerat porttitor. Pellentesque est diam, volutpat vel, ullamcorper nec, sollicitudin pharetra, mauris.

Suspendisse tincidunt. Aliquam consequat. Nunc quis odio. Phasellus erat. Nulla facilisi. Aliquam commodo quam sit amet diam. Ut tincidunt. Pellentesque auctor, justo id mollis euismod, urna justo venenatis nisi, id pretium nibh mauris sit amet justo. Ut feugiat. Suspendisse accumsan nisi quis quam. Etiam congue, nunc et vehicula sodales, ipsum dui blandit nulla, vitae vulputate neque magna imperdiet tortor. Nam commodo rutrum turpis. Pellentesque ante ante, nonummy nec, scelerisque sit amet, tincidunt et, urna. Praesent quis dui. Phasellus commodo elit vel neque. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Sed eu magna. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.

Curabitur dignissim. Sed porttitor leo eu lorem. Aenean egestas pretium odio. Aliquam ut mi vitae sem fringilla laoreet. Quisque rutrum vehicula dolor. Maecenas elementum libero at nisi. Integer sodales vestibulum mi. Nam urna felis, dapibus eget, lacinia non, viverra sollicitudin, orci. Donec aliquam. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Mauris feugiat dolor. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Curabitur a mauris in sapien imperdiet porta. In pretium mauris vitae lorem consequat porttitor. Aliquam erat volutpat.

Nullam adipiscing, lectus id imperdiet sagittis, sem metus varius dolor, non hendrerit nunc purus vel justo. Nulla lacus arcu, commodo quis, pretium in, mattis sed, turpis. Vestibulum quam nisi, convallis eget, pulvinar id, tincidunt nec, urna. Integer vestibulum fringilla enim. Cras vel velit sed nisi ornare sollicitudin. Proin tristique sem quis tortor. Morbi vel eros eu mauris viverra egestas. Integer porta. Fusce erat lacus, convallis nec, porttitor at, mollis in, ligula. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos hymenaeos. Quisque volutpat, risus a condimentum dignissim, mauris mi eleifend leo, in luctus tortor elit sit amet pede. Duis eros dolor, varius non, luctus in, faucibus at, justo. Fusce eget augue sit amet nulla vehicula auctor. Sed fringilla fermentum nisi. Praesent imperdiet. Sed nec arcu rutrum justo imperdiet rhoncus. In nibh nisl, egestas consequat, tempor et, viverra sit amet, mi. Sed quis mauris. Curabitur convallis. Cras interdum cursus justo.

Donec ligula. Nunc urna magna, egestas quis, scelerisque sed, congue vitae, sem. Phasellus quis arcu sit amet odio semper pellentesque. Nam scelerisque felis et risus. Proin scelerisque metus ac leo. Ut aliquet, augue sit amet euismod porta, sapien diam gravida elit, sit amet tempus quam metus sit amet nibh. Sed massa massa, tincidunt eu, scelerisque elementum, eleifend ac, ante. Curabitur pede. Maecenas ultricies vulputate dui. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos hymenaeos.

Return of The Blog's Revenge


This post was done from Blogger, using the blogger thing to insert the images. Apparently the "blog this" option in flickr only allows you to have one photo, plus it can make the formatting a little weird when the blogger and flickr layouts compete...

However, as you can see from my previous posts, the inline photos are linked to the original flickr photo page, which is a nice touch. I believe the images in this post, when clicked, will simply bring up a new window with just the image, making it difficult to see the rest of the flickr album.

The Blob Returns


Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean aliquet, velit sed consectetuer commodo, justo ligula volutpat tortor, sit amet pharetra mauris tortor sed metus. Duis quis nisl a sapien aliquet ullamcorper. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Etiam neque ligula, rutrum in, tempor et, tempor non, metus. Integer leo. Duis at leo. Phasellus nonummy felis quis libero. Curabitur porttitor quam vel tortor mollis commodo. Integer posuere imperdiet sem. Curabitur augue. In ac velit. Sed fermentum massa. Nulla odio est, euismod tempor, porttitor a, egestas nec, tellus. Fusce convallis. Donec quis urna nec sem placerat porttitor. Pellentesque est diam, volutpat vel, ullamcorper nec, sollicitudin pharetra, mauris.

Suspendisse tincidunt. Aliquam consequat. Nunc quis odio. Phasellus erat. Nulla facilisi. Aliquam commodo quam sit amet diam. Ut tincidunt. Pellentesque auctor, justo id mollis euismod, urna justo venenatis nisi, id pretium nibh mauris sit amet justo. Ut feugiat. Suspendisse accumsan nisi quis quam. Etiam congue, nunc et vehicula sodales, ipsum dui blandit nulla, vitae vulputate neque magna imperdiet tortor. Nam commodo rutrum turpis. Pellentesque ante ante, nonummy nec, scelerisque sit amet, tincidunt et, urna. Praesent quis dui. Phasellus commodo elit vel neque. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Sed eu magna. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.

oh, the huge manatee!


L1000559
Originally uploaded by evan.chakroff
A large sea creature and divers spotted at the Knowlton School of Architecture, Columbus Ohio, during final reviews week of spring quarter 2007. This is a particularly strange sight for the following reasons:

1. The KSA has very few large bodies of water, none of which are nearly large enough to sustain a full-size manatee.

2. This particular manatee appears to be computer-generated, and I suspect may not be a manatee at all, but merely a cartoon illustration of one.

Further time for investigation is clearly needed. Stay tuned for at least 300 more blog posts on this particular issue.

(testing... testing....)

Friday, June 01, 2007

Kent, Ohio - Image Test






To demonstrate picture uploads, this is a test message with several images of Kent, Ohio.
These images were taken downtown, where a rail line runs by an abandoned factory and close to the central business district.




Thursday, May 31, 2007

Hello, World!

Hello, World! This blog will be used to allow student from the Knowlton School of Architecture to post their travel experiences while studying abroad. In addition to posting updates from the field, the goal is to have students also upload travel photos to a service such as Panoramio.

Students who will be studying overseas during the summer of 2007 are invited to contact Matt Bernhardt if you'd like to be a part of this project.

Monday, January 08, 2007

Pictobrowser

Thanks to Evan for finding this picture browser service:



It seems interesting as a way of posting a series of pictures to the blog without needing to paste individual image URLs...thoughts? Is it worth putting together a tutorial of how to use this?